The software used by many wireless IP cameras manufactured by Foscam Digital Technologies have a vulnerability that allows remote users to access their video streams and take snapshots without proper authentication.
The issue was reported on the Foscam technical support forum this week by the owner of a Foscam FI8905W Wireless IP Camera that’s built for outdoor environments.
”I discovered fairly early in my testing, that the user could just press OK in the dialogue window without filling in a user or password and they would be taken to the image,” a user with the nickname SENWiEco said Monday. The camera was running the latest firmware version at the time—11.35.2.54, he said.
Default password for Foscam FI9853EP router. Here you can find the default IP address and the username and password for the user interface. # Login data for FI9853EP Foscam. Accessing the user interface is important once you need to change the router settings.For the Foscam FI9853EP, you have to do the following steps for access.
A regular forum user and software developer named Don Kennedy who uses the nickname TheUberOverLord subsequently investigated the issue and concluded that other indoor and outdoor camera models from Foscam’s MJPEG series have the same issue. Kennedy tracked down the problem to the software’s user management system.
Foscam MJPEG cameras support as many as eight separate user accounts with different privileges: Administrator, Operator and Visitor. The user administration interface has eight user ID fields, but only one of them is configured by default with user name “admin” and privilege Administrator. The rest are blanked out and have the Visitor privilege assigned by default.
According to Kennedy, if any of the eight user slots is left empty—with no username and password configured—it’s possible to access the camera by simply hitting OK on the authentication prompt. This will give the remote user Visitor privileges and allow them to access video streams with or without audio, take snapshots and execute any CGI commands available to the Visitor access level.
A workaround is to manually configure user names and passwords for all eight user ID fields, Kennedy said. However, this has the downside of exposing the camera to denial-of-service attacks.
According to Kennedy, there’s a second bug that causes the camera to freeze after a certain number of failed attempts to access the camera without a user name and password. In this happens, the camera owner might need to restart the camera by powering it down and back up, he said.
This could be inconvenient, especially since many of these cameras are set up so they can be monitored remotely, so their owners might not immediately have physical access to them.
The issue appears to be restricted to system firmware version .54 for the MJPEG Indoor and Outdoor camera models, Kennedy said Monday on the forum. “The following MJPEG based camera models have a system firmware version of .54 currently released: FI8904W, FI8905E, FI8905W, FI8906W, FI8907W, FI8909W, FI8910E, FI8910W, FI8916W, FI8918W and FI8919W,” he said at the time.
However, it appears that Foscam released firmware version .55 for some of those camera models Thursday. The firmware update is available for download from the company’s website and its changelog file specifies that it fixes a bug allowing the execution of CGI commands without authentication. The update also prevents using blank spaces in the user name field and adds support for special characters in passwords.
In an update on the Foscam forum, Kennedy confirmed that version .55 of the firmware fixes the unauthorized access vulnerability. However it does not resolve the camera freeze issue, he said.
This means an attacker who repeatedly tries to access Internet-facing cameras running the new .55 firmware version with a blank user name and password might end up temporarily disabling those cameras.
Foscam did not immediately respond to an inquiry seeking clarifications about which affected models haven’t received the .55 firmware update and the denial-of-service issue.
A security notice on the company’s U.S. website that appears to be updated periodically currently reads: “Foscam is fully committed to maintaining the safety and integrity of our user experience and will take all action reasonably necessary to ensure the privacy and security of our cameras. As soon as a security vulnerability is revealed Foscam endeavors to immediately release a firmware update to fix the issue. As of January 19, 2014, there are no known vulnerabilities with any of our cameras once updated with the latest firmware as outlined below. All cameras currently sold by Foscam.us are upgraded with the latest firmware.”
In the same message the company recommends changing the default user name and password of the camera, changing the default port for remote access and regularly checking the camera’s logs, which can reveal unauthorized access attempts.
In April, security researchers from Qualys reported several security weaknesses in Foscam cameras and said that using the Shodan search engine they were able to find more than 100,000 cameras connected to the Internet. They estimated at the time that two out of every 10 of those cameras allow users to log in with the default “admin” user and no password.
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Foscam's $220 (available in both the UK for £135 and in Australia for AU$230) Plug and Play Wireless IP Camera FI9826P is full of contradictions. It's a high-quality pan, tilt and zoom camera with night vision, two-way talk, an SD card slot and opt-in Cloud storage services. Despite these solid specs, its web interface is extremely antiquated and downright DIY-unfriendly; unfortunately, you have to navigate it to successfully sign up for email notifications and to make a bunch of other camera-related settings adjustments.
Tack on the mobile app's lack of push notifications and the FI9826P's initial promise fades fast. Since it delivers in terms of optics, it will work as a live-streaming solution. But, both the Web and mobile app need major design overhauls to match the real-time, DIY-security-camera-style of Foscam's closest competition.
At a glance
The FI9826P is a hefty 1.8-pound camera that's available in either black or white. If your router has a Wi-Fi Protected Setup button (WPS), you can connect it wirelessly. Otherwise you're stuck tethering the camera to the router via the included Ethernet cable. I went the WPS route and experience a few hiccups early on.
The 'quick installation guide' walks you through a series of steps -- pressing the WPS button on the camera and on the router, downloading the Foscam Viewer app on your Android or iOS device (there are several unofficial Foscam apps, Foscam viewer is the one you want), scanning the QR code on the bottom of the camera (quite a balancing act) and registering with a unique username and password.
This process was pretty confusing. I created a username and a password only for it to return an error message: 'Login Fail: Username or Password Incorrect.' Apparently, you have to log in the first time with Foscam's default username, admin, and no password. Then, it gives you the chance to update your info, but I had to reset the camera before it actually accepted my new username and password.
From there, I was able to access live streaming in either single-or-quadrant-view (great if you have multiple cameras running simultaneously). I was also able to record video, take snapshots, pan, tilt, zoom, set night vision and enable audio for two-way talk.
It also has an 'Enable Push Message' option for motion-related security events, but I wasn't having any luck getting it to work. Foscam confirmed that push alerts are not currently available on the Foscam Viewer app (either for Android or iOS users), but that a new app should be coming out within the month that will offer this feature. How odd.